But the strong yen weighed on the world's No.2 maker of flash memory chips behind Samsung Electronics, sending its core chip profits down close to 20 percent, even as its nuclear power business confronts regulatory delays in the wake of the Fukushima nuclear crisis.

Toshiba is betting on further cost cuts as a new NAND production line comes online, and retained its annual forecast for an operating profit of 300 billion yen ($4 billion), above the 281 billion yen consensus estimate of 23 analysts polled by ThomsonReuters I/B/E/S.

The climb in profits came from cutting PC procurement costs and restructuring its display operations, as well as solid demand for smartphone displays, storage devices and lighting, while Toshiba's NAND flash chips recorded an operating profit margin of more than 20 percent.

Toshiba, a supplier to Apple Inc, has been helped by demand for the iPad and iPhone and smartphones using Google's Android platform. Both rival Samsung and Toshiba production partner Sandisk hurtled past expectations on smartphone demand.

Shares in Toshiba, which also competes with Hynix Semiconductor Inc in semiconductors and with GE and Areva in nuclear reactors, have fallen 19 percent this calendar year, broadly in line with Tokyo's electrical machinery subindex.

Its shares closed down 3.9 percent prior to the announcement, underperforming a 1 percent fall in Tokyo's electric machinery subindex.